We know Trauma is pernicious and destructive but what intensifies it, is the memories behind it, which sometimes are mirthful but majorly are full of glum and disappointment and this inner tumult and dissonance is what writers portray in their seminal works. Khaled Hosseini who is an acclaimed Afghan-American author, has been bestowed with immense international accreditation for his poignant and emotive narratives, enumerating the complexities of human relationships within the ethical and socio-political milieu. His novels The Kite Runner (2003) and And the Mountains Echoed (2013) evince myriads of thematic concerns that reverberate across cultures and time. This paper scrutinizes the preponderant themes in these two novels, including penitence and vindication, kinship, memory and trauma, banishment and expulsion, and the role of socio-political pandemonium. Through a critical and in-depth assessment of the selected texts, this paper aims to portray a panoptic apprehension of Hosseini’s thematic tryst with the convolution of Afghan identity, the effects of war, and the ubiquitous grapple for individual and ethical concord.
Singh et al. (Mon,) studied this question.